A motor protector of the type having a snap acting thermostatic element is shown particularly adapted for use with compressor motors in which a conventional three pin header is mounted on the compressor casing to allow electrical energization of the motor. An improved heat transfer path is formed between the windings of the motor and the thermostatic element of the protector by suspending the protector from one of the motor pins in optimum heat conductive relation therewith and thermally separated from the compressor casing and any component mounted on the other two pins.

Patent
   4646195
Priority
Nov 14 1983
Filed
Oct 11 1984
Issued
Feb 24 1987
Expiry
Feb 24 2004

TERM.DISCL.
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
16
11
all paid
1. A motor protector particularly adapted for use with compressors having a compressor shell and at least three electrically and thermally conductive pins electrically separated from one another and from the shell extending through the shell, the pins electrically connected to the windings of a motor disposed within the shell, the first pin connected to a start winding, the second pin connected to a main winding and the third pin connected to a common connection between the start and main winding, the first and second pins adapted to be connected to motor starting means having pin receiving terminals, the motor protector comprising a movable and a stationary electrical contact, the movable contact adapted to move into and out of engagement with the stationary contact, a snap acting thermostatic element operatively connected to the movable contact to move the movable contact upon selected thermal conditions between the contacts engaged position and the contacts disengaged position, terminal means attached to the protector comprising a metallic electrically and thermally conductive mounting bracket having two opposite ends, one end connected to the protector in good heat transfer relation therewith and the other end formed into a female connector configuration adapted to be received on the third pin, the bracket adapted to suspend the protector on the third pin so that it is thermally separated from the motor starting means, a direct metal to metal heat conductive path extending from the main and start windings through the third pin, through the mounting bracket to the protector.
9. A motor protector particularly adapted for use with compressors having a compressor shell and at least three electrically and thermally conductive pins electrically separated from one another and from the shell extending through the shell, the pins electrically connected to the windings of a motor disposed within the shell, the first pin connected to a start winding, the second pin connected to a main winding and the third pin connected to a common connection between the start and main winding, the first and second pins adapted to be connected to motor starting means having pin receiving terminals, the motor protector comprising a movable and a stationary electrical contact, the movable contact adapted to move into and out of engagement with the stationary contact, a thermostatic element operatively connected to the movable contact to move the movable contact upon selected thermal conditions between the contacts engaged position and the contacts disengaged position, the thermostatic element disposed on a thermally conductive support member, terminal means attached to the protector comprising a metallic electrically and thermally conductive mounting bracket having two opposite ends, one end bonded to the support member in good heat transfer relation therewith and the other end formed into a female connector configuration adapted to be received on the third pin, the brakcet adapted to suspend the protector on the third pin so that it is thermally separated from the motor starting means, a direct metal to metal heat conductive path extending from the main and start windings through the third pin, through the mounting bracket, through the support member to the thermostatic element.
8. A motor protector particularly adapted for use with compressors having a compressor shell and at least three electrically and thermally conductive pins electrically separated from one another and from the shell extending through the shell, the pins electrically connected to the windings of a motor disposed within the shell, the first pin connected to a start winding, the second pin connected to a main winding and the third pin connected to a common connection between the start and main winding, the first and second pins adapted to be connected to motor starting means having pin receiving terminals, the motor protector comprising a movable and a stationary electrical contact, the movable contact adapted to move into and out of engagement with the stationary contact, a thermostatic, current carrying element operatively connected to the movable contact to move the movable contact upon selected thermal conditions between the contacts engaged position and the contacts disengaged position, one of the stationary contact and the thermostatic element mounted on a thermally and electrically conductive support member, terminal means attached to the protector comprising a metallic electrically and thermally conductive mounting bracket having two opposite ends, one end connected to the support member in good electrical and heat transfer relation therewith and the other end formed into a female connector configuration adapted to be received on the third pin, the bracket adapted to suspend the protector on the third pin so that it is thermally separated from the motor starting means, a direct metal to metal heat conductive path extending from the main and start windings through the third pin, through the mounting bracket, through the support member to said one of the stationary contact and the thermostatic element.
2. A motor protector according to claim 1 further including a thermally conductive support member, the thermostatic element mounted on the support member.
3. A motor protector according to claim 1 in which a heater element is mounted on the protector in heat transfer relation with the thermostatic element.
4. A motor protector according to claim 3 in which the direct metal to metal heat conductive path extending from the main and start windings to the protector extends to the heater element.
5. A motor protector according to claim 2 in which the support member for the thermostatic element forms a portion of a metallic housing.
6. A motor protector according to claim 5 in which the said portion of a metallic housing is formed with a bottom wall having a side wall depending therefrom to form a switch chamber in which the thermostatic element is disposed.
7. A motor protector according to claim 5 in which the said portion of a metallic housing is a generally flat plate which cooperates with another portion of the metallic housing having a bottom wall with a side wall depending therefrom to form a switch chamber with an open end, said generally flat plate received over said open end with electrical insulating material disposed between the housing portions, the plate closing said open end.

This application is a continuation in part of Ser. No. 551,619 filed Nov. 14, 1983.

The present invention relates generally to improved motor protectors and more specifically to motor protectors particularly useful with split phase motors commonly used with refrigerator compressors and the like.

Over the years there have been a number of different ways used to provide thermal protection for motors to prevent fault conditions from causing overheating of the motors with concomitant burn out or other damage to the motor. For example, it is known to provide thermal protection by placing a motor protector switch on or in the motor windings in order to enable the protector to closely follow the temperature of the motor and to be sensitive to overtemperature conditions so that it can be deenergized before any damage due to overheating occurs. See for example United Kingdom patent specification No. 1,096,511 in which a temperature sensor is placed in the motor winding. However when used with refrigeration compressors or the like, special protector constructions are required in order to provide a hermetic seal so that the switch environment is not affected by the refrigerant fluid. Such seals and significantly to the cost of the device.

Placing the protector outside the compressor shell is much more convenient and obviates the hermetic seal problem. such protectors are typically provided with heaters energized by motor current so that they can serve as an analog of the windings. See for example U.S. Pat. No. 2,768,342. That is, excess current causes extra heat generation which is transferred to the thermostatic element of the protector causing it to move to a contacts disengaged position thereby deenergizing the motor.

However a continuing problem has been to provide suitable on/off times to permit the fluid pressure in the compressor to equalize so the motor can be started with minimum torque requirements. Several approaches have been followed in attempting to solve this problem. One approach is to place the protector in thermal communication with the starting resistor of the motor. That is, as seen in the above noted United Kingdom specification, it is conventional to place a resistor having a high positive temperature coefficient of resistance (PTC) in the starting circuit of an electric motor. By placing the PtC resistor so that it serves as a heat sink for the protector, heat is transferred from the PTC to the protector to provide longer off times of the protector to allow pressure equalization. See for instance U.S. Pat. Nos. RE 31,367 and 4,084,202, Japanese Utility Model 55-22872 and Japanese Patent No. 53-37806. However this approach results in increasing the temperature tolerance of the protector and militates against its ability to closely track the temperature of the motor windings.

Yet another approach is to place the protector so that it is in close spatial relationship with the compressor casing to thereby sense the temperature of the casing to use the casing as a thermal analog of the motor winding temperature. This can be seen in German Patent Application DE 31 18 638 Al, and Japanese Utility Model 57-226. However since the casing is electrically grounded, electrical insulation is required between the casing and the protector, for example a layer of air or other electrical insulation, which also tends to make the protector less sensitive to the temperature of the casing. Further, due to the thermal mass of the casing there is an undesirable inherent time lag between the motor winding temperature and the casing temperature which adversely affects the tracking ability of the protector relative to the windings.

It is therefor an object of the invention to provide motor protector apparatus for mounting externally of a compressor casing which has improved motor winding temperature tracking capability. Another object is the provision of such apparatus which can be used with motor starting devices without having its motor winding temperature tracking capability affected so that optimum starting and protecting can be provided.

Briefly, the present invention relates to a motor protector adapted to be suspended on a fusite pin extending through the compressor shell in improved heat transfer relation with the motor windings. The fusite pin, being electrically isolated from the shell and directly connected to the motor windings, forms a direct thermal path from the windings to the protector. The protector is provided with a heat conductive mounting bracket which is connected in optimum heat transfer relation with a metallic housing of the protector which serves as a thermally conductive support for the thermostatic disc either directly or through the stationary electrical contact of the protector. In order to optimize thermal isolation of the protector relative to the remaining environs a housing of thermally insulative material is employed which shields the protector from other heat sources or drains disposed in the vicinity. In one embodiment the housing is provided with skirt means to limit rotation of the protector so that it cannot come into physical contact with apparatus such as a PTC starting device mounted on other fusite pins. In another embodiment a housing of a PTC starting device having means to retard heat flow from the PTC resistor is extended to receive the protector in such a manner to ensure that the protector is suspended on the common fusite pin thermally separated from the PTC resistor as well as the compressor casing.

Other objects, advantages, and details of the novel and improved motor protector of this invention appear in the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention, the detailed description referring to the drawings in which:

FIG. 1 is a top plan view of a fusite connector of a compressor on which a motor protector made in accordance with the inveniton is mounted on the common pin while a PTC starting device, with its top cover removed for purposes of illustration, is mounted on the start and main winding pins;

FIG. 2 is an enlarged cross sectional view along the length of a protector useful in the FIG. 1 embodiment,

FIG. 3 is a cross sectional view taken on line 3--3 of FIG. 2;

FIG. 4 is side elevational view of an embodiment similar to that shown in FIG. 1 with the fusite connector shown in cross section, the protector shown disposed in a separate housing and the PTC starting device shown with its top cover in place;

FIG. 5 is a top plan view of a protector and housing, similar to that shown in FIG. 2, but without the PTC starting device;

FIG. 6 is a rear elevational view of the protector housing shown in FIG. 5; and

FIG. 7 is a view similar to FIG. 4 of another embodiment of the invention.

Referring to FIG. 1 of the drawings, numeral 10 is used to designate a motor protector connected to pin PC of a conventional fusite connector 2 mounted on a compressor casing 4 to facilitate electrical connection to the main and start windings of a split phase induction motor mounted within the compressor casing. As best seen in FIGS. 2 and 3, protector 10 includes a generally parallelepiped, open ended, electrically and thermally conductive metal can or housing 12 having a bottom 14 and depending opposed side walls 16 and end walls 18. Walls 16 and 18 have a free end formed into a ledge portion 20 extending around the open end of the housing. Side walls 16 are formed with portions 50 extending from ledge 20 to facilitate attachment of a gasket 44 and plate like element 34 to be described below. Indentation 24 is formed in the housing bottom to provide a weld projection inside the housing bottom to mount a thermostatic bimetal element 126 using a conventional weld button 28 so that bimetal member 26 extends in cantilever relation to the housing bottom to support a movable electrical contact 30 of conventional contact material at the distal free end of the bimetal member. The bimetal member 26 preferably has a dished portion so that the member is adapted to move with snap action from a first position shown in solid lines in FIG. 2 to a second position shown in broken lines when the bimetal is heated to a selected actuating temperature. The bimetal member is also adapted to move with snap action back to said first position when the bimetal member subsequently cools to a relatively lower, reset temperature. An indentation 32 in the housing bottom provides a stop for limiting movement of the bimetal member as it snaps to the second, broken line position.

The protector 10 also includes a generally flat, electrically and thermally conductive metallic lid 34. Stationary electrical contact 38 is mounted on a first portion 36 of the lid while a second portion 40 may be formed into a selected heater configuration as set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 4,399,423. A third portion, outer marginal berm 42 is adapted to support element 34. Lid 34 is also provided with an integrally formed tab 48 which serves as a terminal member. After placement of gasket 44 and plate element 34 on ledge 20 of housing 12 extensions 50 are bent over to clampingly attach the gasket and plate element to the housing. If preferred, other types of heaters may be employed or in certain applications, it may be preferred to use no supplemental heater. Further, it should be noted that the location of thermostatic member 26 and contact 38 can be interchanged if desired, as shown schematically by the broken lines in FIG. 1 , with member 26 mounted on the lid of protector 10 with or without the provision of a supplemental heater.

A bracket 52 of electrically and thermally conductive material is provided with two opposite ends, one end 52.1 bonded to the housing, as by welding, in good electrical and heat transfer relation therewith and the other end 52.2 formed into a female pin connector configuration adapted to be received on fusite pin PC. Bracket 52 suspends protector 10 on pin PC so that it is separated physically and, as much as possible thermally from casing shell 4 and from motor starting means which may be mounted on the other two conventional fusite pins, PS and PM, used to provide electrical connection to the start and main windings respectively. Mounting protector 10 in this manner provides a direct, metal to metal heater conductive path extending from the main and start windings through pin PC, through bracket 52, housing 14 to bimetal 26, or as shown in FIG. 1 from the main start windings through pin PC, through bracket 52, housing 14, through stationary contact 38, to bimetal 26.

As seen in FIG. 1, a motor starting relay 60 is also shown connected to pins PS and PM. For purposes of illustration the top cover of the relay has been removed. Relay 60 includes a case 62 of thermally and electrically insulating material inside of which is disposed a wafer 64 of a material with a positive coefficient of temperature (PTC) resistivity of a type well known to those skilled in the art. The wafer 64 is positioned by ribs 66 made on the inside of case 62 and by two leaf springs 67, 68 fastened to electrical connection means 69, 70. The springs 67, 68 have fins or arms that make contact with metallized surfaces provided on wafer 64.

The electrical connection means 69, 70 are provided with female "plug-on" connectors 71, 72 adapted to be received on fusite pins PS and PM. The construction of relay 60 is such as to minimize the thermal conduction from wafer 64 to case 62. For more detailed information on relay 60 reference may be had to U.S. Pat. No. 4,241,370 assigned to the assignee of the instant invention.

It will be noted from FIG. 1 that protector 10, suspended on pin PC is spatially separated from relay 60 with protector 10 disposed on a side of pin PC remote from pins PS and PM while relay 60 is essentially disposed on a side of pins PS and PM remote from pin PC to minimize any heat transfer from relay 60 to protector 10 and to optimize heat transfer from the motor windings to protector 10 through pin PC. This mounting allows the use of a thermostatic element 26 which can be calibrated to more effectively protect the motor windings since the masking of heat received by the thermostatic element from other sources is minimized.

FIG. 4 shows protector 10 disposed in a separate housing 74 formed of electrically and thermally insulative material to enhance the thermal isolation of protector 10 from heat sources other than pin PC. Housing 74, see also FIGS. 5 and 6, has top, bottom and side walls 74.1, 74.2, 74.3 and 74.4 respectively. A closed end 74.5 is provided with an aperture therethrough to receive terminal 48 of protector 10 which may be welded to a quick connect blade terminal 76 to permit electrical connection to line power.

End 74.6 may be open to facilitate insertion of the protector into the housing. A skirt 74.7 depends from bottom wall 74.2 and is arranged to limit angular rotation of housing 74 on pin PC by engaging pin connector 2 to maintain a minimum spacing between housing 74 and relay 60. Skirt 74.7 also serves as a stop to ensure a minimum spacing of the housing from casing 4.

FIG. 7 shows an alternative embodiment in which the housing for protector 10 is formed integrally with casing 62 of relay 60. A chamber 80 is formed thermally isolated from PTC wafer 64 by wall 80.1. Bracket 82 of thermally and electrically conductive metal has a first end 82.1 bonded to housing 10, as by welding and a second end 82.2 formed into a female connector to be received on pin PC. An offset central portion, generally at right angles to the ends of bracket 82 serves as a seat portion for the housing to enhance heat transfer thereto as well as locate protector 10 at its selected location within chamber 80.

It should be understood that the thermostatic disc could be mounted in ways other than shown in the drawings and still come within the purview of the invention. For instance, the disc could be used as a conductive bridge movable into and out of engagment with a pair of stationary contacts or it could be a non-current carrying member adapted to bias a normally closed movable contact arm upon actuation into a contacts open position.

In view of the above, it will be seen that the several objects of the invention are achieved providing an improved heat path from the motor windings inside the compressor shell to an exteriorly mounted protector to enable closer temperature tracking of the windings by the motor, as well as other advantageous results attained.

As various changes could be made in the above constructions without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.

Lisauskas, Richard J.

Patent Priority Assignee Title
4689595, Aug 06 1985 Danfoss A/S PTC starter for asynchronous motor
4701824, Oct 29 1985 Texas Instruments Incorporated Protected refrigerator compressor motor systems and motor protectors therefor
5126196, Sep 26 1988 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Protective device for a hermetic motor-driven compressor
5729416, May 30 1995 General Electric Company Motor starter and protector module
5942967, Nov 22 1997 Compressor plug with internal thermal overload protection
6317304, Oct 30 1997 SENSATA TECHNOLOGIES MASSACHUSETTS, INC Assembly of electric motor-controlling components
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7102481, Dec 03 2003 SENSATA TECHNOLOGIES MASSACHUSETTS, INC Low current electric motor protector
7109840, May 27 2004 SENSATA TECHNOLOGIES MASSACHUSETTS, INC Protector for electrical apparatus
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Executed onAssignorAssigneeConveyanceFrameReelDoc
Oct 05 1984LISAUSKAS, RICHARD J TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED, A CORP OF DE ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST 0043230574 pdf
Oct 11 1984Texas Instruments Incorporated(assignment on the face of the patent)
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Aug 06 1990M173: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Year, PL 97-247.
Mar 23 1994M184: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Year, Large Entity.
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